Piers Flint-Shipman (1962–1984), British actor, also known by the stage name Frederick Alexander
Flint, Michigan | Eric Flint | Flint | Piers Morgan | flint | Piers Plowman | Piers Anthony | Piers Sellers | Piers Gaveston | Flint Northern High School | Chelsea Piers | Valerie Flint | Piers Maxwell Dudley-Bateman | Piers Gough | Flint Southwestern Academy | Flint Community Schools | Flint Central High School | Caroline Flint | Piers Gaveston, 1st Earl of Cornwall | Piers Benn | Ellen Biddle Shipman | James Flint (British novelist) | James Flint | Flint School | Flint Engine South | William Russell Flint | William Davis Shipman | W. H. Shipman House | Ryan Piers Williams | Rhoda Shipman |
On June 2, 2009, Harper Collins published Womenomics, a book written by Shipman and BBC World News America correspondent Katty Kay exploring the redefinition of success for working women based on recent trends of the value of women to the business world.
Shipman died in 1957, and is buried in the Gilkey Cemetery beside the family estate in Plainfield, New Hampshire.
Shipman, with wife Rhoda Shipman, created the independently produced comic book series Pakkins' Land, both plotting out the stories together and Gary scripting, lettering, penciling, and inking the illustrations for the series.
In 1873, President Ulysses S. Grant named Shipman as a judge of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut.
Like filmmaker Bruce Brown creating "Endless Summer" about the same time, Shipman was seeking a "perfect wave", superior to the known surfing spots of the period.
After practicing privately with Shipman and Goodman, Palmer was as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Connecticut, interrupted briefly by a stint in the firm of Chatigny and Palmer.
In the early 1930s, Cecil B. DeMille filmed Four Frightened People in the gulch below the house, as well as on the Shipman land in Puna.